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Amyloid
The Journal of Protein Folding Disorders
Volume 20, 2013 - Issue 2
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Research Article

Different morphology of amyloid fibrils originating from agitated and non-agitated conditions

, , , , &
Pages 86-92 | Received 27 Nov 2012, Accepted 10 Mar 2013, Published online: 09 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

In vitro amyloid formation has been suggested to be a common property of any polypeptide chain depending on particular environmental conditions although in vivo amyloid fibril formation can be promoted by point mutations or triplet expansions. Here, we explored the influence of agitation on fibril formation of amyloidogenic alanine segments fused to Cold Shock Protein B (CspB) of Bacillus subtilis. While without agitation fibril formation was clearly dependent on the presence of an amyloidogenic alanine segment, fibril formation was independent of the amyloidogenic segment under agitation. Agitation even led to fibrillation of native CspB lacking the amyloidogenic segment. Furthermore, agitation not only influenced the kinetics of fibril formation, but also resulted in completely different fibril morphologies. These results indicate that experimental conditions can alter the region that undergoes a conformational change during in vitro fibrillation. Moreover, the data show that deductions from in vitro assays on in vivo fibril formation mechanisms are afflicted with a certain degree of uncertainty and therefore need to be cautiously discussed.

Acknowledgements

We thank Gary Sawers for critically reading the manuscript and language editing.

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